Author: Yours Truly Johnny Blogger

EP3837: Sam Spade: The One Hour Caper

Sam leaves an hour before a photo shoot to answer a call from a printer, and shows up one hour later beaten and bruised.

Original Air Date: January 4, 1948

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Book Review: A Man Called Spade And Other Stories

The vintage Dell Paperback edition of A Man Called Spade begins with an introduction by Ellery Queen (pseudonym of cousins Frederic Dannay and Manfred Bennington Lee) praising Hammett as a mystery writer, and Spade as a character. The stage is set for five stories, three featuring Sam Spade, and two others included as these three weren’t long enough to make up a book.

The titular story, “A Man Called Spade,” sees Sam go to an apartment in response to a phone call asking for his help. Sam arrives to find his potential client murdered.

It’d be too much to expect this to be another Maltese Falcon, but “A Man Called Spade” is practically a second-rate mystery story. It’s nearly 50 pages long and finds Spade and Lieutenant Dundy walking around a single location questioning a bunch of unremarkable and forgettable characters about what they know.

Sam gets a few decent lines and the solution’s not half bad. But 90% of the story is spent on a very long questioning scene. It’s a dull story that’s practically lifeless.

“They Can Only Hang You Once” finds Spade arriving at a house to find his man murdered. In this case, Sam was at least out on a case when it happened and pretending to be someone else. Once again, he’s teamed up with Dundy in walking around the various suspects. This one is a much pacier story. At only 22 pages, while not an ideal Sam Spade vehicle, it’s better for not dragging on.

In “Too Many Have Lived,” Sam is hired to track down a failed poet who turns up dead and then has to solve his murder. This is a very good hard-boiled private detective story with a good mix of shady characters, red herrings, and an engaging case. Again, it’s no Maltese Falcon, but it’s a fun little read.

In “The Assistant Murderer,” the focus shifts to disgraced ex-cop turned private eye Alex Rush, who is ugly (as Hammett tells us multiple times) and he’s called in by a man who thinks a beautiful former employee is in trouble. Rush finds himself caught in a twisting, turning world of murder, corrupt characters, and unreliable stories left and right. This is a really engaging story. It would have been nice had Rush come closer to the truth on his own rather than having the character spill it to him, but there’s something to be said for being able to apply the right pressure to the guilty party.

“His Brother’s Keeper” follows a young naive boxer in the ring who’s in a very dark and dangerous situation without even knowing it. Hammett makes the boxer his first-person point of view character. This is a departure from most other stories that are told from the point of view of street-smart detectives. It’s a decent story and an interesting experiment in Hammett’s range.

Overall, most of these stories were actually quite good although the titular story bogs things down and takes up more than a quarter of the book. Still, I’m glad I read the collection. “Too Many Have Lived” and “The Assistant Murderer” were both superb stories and the other two were decent enough.

Rating 3.75 out of 5

This collection is out of print. But another collection containing these stories plus two others is available in Paperback and for the Kindle.(affiliate link)

EP3836: Tales of the Texas Rangers: The Wheelchair Killer

Jace is called in to investigate the killing of an eighty-year-old man in a wheelchair.

Original Air Date: October 7, 1951

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EP3835: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Harpooned Angler Matter

John Lund

Johnny travels to the French Riviera to investigate when a heavily insured man is killed underwater with a harpoon.

Original Air Date: February 9, 1954

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EP3834: Philo Vance: The Motor Murder Case

A race car driver dies on the track, but Vance doesn’t think it’s an accident.

Original Air Date: June 28, 1949

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AWR0201: Yarns for Yanks: The Very Honorable Augustus

Amazing World of Radio

A grifter running an airplane ride gets a soft spot for a desperate father who needs his sick son flown to the city.

Original Air Date: 1942

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EP3833: Dangerous Assignment: Find Missing Japanese Weapons

Steve goes to Panama to complete the mission of a friend, who was killed trying to locate a cache of Japanese weapons from World War II.

Original Air Date: February 6, 1950

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EP3832: Mr. Chameleon: The Dream House Murder Case

Karl Swenson

A woman is poisoned in her “dream house” after eating a piece of cake.

Original Air Date: January 31, 1951

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EP3831: Sam Spade: The Bow Window Caper

Sam is hired by a doctor whose jealous wife is ruining his practice and has threatened to use a gun.

Original Air Date: November 9, 1947

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Video Theater 230: U.S. Marshal: Sentenced to Death

A violent criminal (Jack Lord) is sentenced to death in a fatal robbery. Marshal Morgan is charged with delivering the man to prison, but suspects he has an escape plan.

Season 1, Episode 3

Original Air Date: October 25, 1958

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EP3830: Tales of the Texas Rangers: Shaft of Death

A murdered body is found inside a closed-up mine.

Original Air Date: September 30, 1951

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Streaming Review: Runaway (1984)

In the film Runaway, it’s the near future, and people rely on robots for a lot of things, but sometimes robots go haywire and run away. It’s the job of Jack Ramsay (Tom Selleck) to fix it. However, when robots start to kill by program, it’s up to Ramsay and his partner to stop them,

The acting in this film is decent enough, with Tom Selleck turning in an expected good performance as the action hero. Kristie Alley gives the best performance in the film as the villain’s girlfriend, which netted her a nomination for a Saturn Award for Best Supporting Actress. The villain is played by none other than Gene Simmons of KISS. The film is also the movie debut of child star Joey Cramer (best known to a certain generation of 80s kids for his lead role in Flight of the Navigator.)

However, where the film really shines is on a technical level. The practical effects used to bring the robots and chase scenes to life are really impressive for the time, making for some superb action scenes and a superficially good visual feel.

The film’s weakness is really its writing. When you strip away the robots and all the cool visuals, what writer/director Michael Crighton has produced is a very standard 1980s cop film. Our hero is a cop traumatized by the death of his partner and has emotional baggage from that, which can only be overcome by engaging in copious amounts of violence, during which his new female partner falls in love with him because they’re the leads. No word on whether his partner was only three days from retirement, but it wouldn’t surprise me if that were so.

In addition. while the robots are well-designed, it feels like very little thought was given to the world they inhabit. The ready availability of skilled robots at the level of this film would have major implications for society and would literally change the world. You wouldn’t expect a film (particularly Runaway) to go into some discussion of all the ethical and social implications, but you’d expect the writer to have thought through what those would be and to shape his world accordingly. Yet, the world of Runaway is very much “The Eighties but if everyone had robots.” Given the pioneering science fiction films of the era, such as Blade Runner, Terminator, 2010: The Year We Make Contact, and the Star Trek films, it’s easy to see that this was forgotten.

It is by no means a bad film for what it is. If you think a typical 1980s cop film starring Tom Selleck and robots sounds fun, I don’t think this will disappoint. But despite its strength of cast, director and effects, it’s an ultimately disposable and forgettable film.

Rating 2:5 out of 5

As of this writing, Runaway is available for free viewing on Amazon Prime.

This post contains affiliate links, which means that items purchased from these links may result in a commission being paid to the author of this post at no extra cost to the purchaser.

EP3829: Yours Truly Johnny Dollar: The Paul Gorrell Matter

John Lund

Johnny goes undercover on a share-the-ride trip with a robber and killer in hopes of reclaiming the stolen money.

Original Air Date: February 2, 1954

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EP3828: Philo Vance: The Peacock Murder Case


A woman brings a thug to Vance’s office who beats Vance up to stop Vance from taking a case for a wealthy man.

Original Air Date: June 21, 1949

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EP3827: Dangerous Assignment: File No. 307

Steve goes to Zurich in search of a stolen Defense Department file.

Original Air Date: August 20, 1949

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